"There's something about having a great bottle of wine and a great cigar. Nothing compares to it"
About this Quote
Hughley’s line isn’t really about wine or cigars; it’s about permission. In a culture that publicly prizes hustle, optimization, and “clean living,” he’s staking out a stubbornly analog pleasure: slow, fragrant, unapologetically indulgent. The phrasing matters. “There’s something about” signals a half-shrug, a refusal to over-explain. It’s the language of someone who knows the moment can’t be defended on nutritional grounds and doesn’t care. Then he lands the closer: “Nothing compares to it.” That’s not a tasting note, it’s a boundary. This is a private ritual elevated to a small throne.
The subtext is status, too, but not the gaudy kind. A “great bottle” and a “great cigar” imply discernment and access, yes, yet they also imply time. You can’t rush either. Hughley, as a comic and actor who’s spent decades reading rooms and running schedules, is pointing to a luxury that isn’t just money: it’s uninterruptible calm. That’s why the pairing works culturally; it’s a miniature rebellion against the always-on economy.
Contextually, the quote sits inside a familiar American performance of masculinity and decompression. The cigar is the prop of contemplation; the wine softens the edges. It’s not health advice, it’s mood architecture: a deliberate setting where stress is kept outside the door and pleasure is allowed to be the point.
The subtext is status, too, but not the gaudy kind. A “great bottle” and a “great cigar” imply discernment and access, yes, yet they also imply time. You can’t rush either. Hughley, as a comic and actor who’s spent decades reading rooms and running schedules, is pointing to a luxury that isn’t just money: it’s uninterruptible calm. That’s why the pairing works culturally; it’s a miniature rebellion against the always-on economy.
Contextually, the quote sits inside a familiar American performance of masculinity and decompression. The cigar is the prop of contemplation; the wine softens the edges. It’s not health advice, it’s mood architecture: a deliberate setting where stress is kept outside the door and pleasure is allowed to be the point.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wine |
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